North Macedonia Issues Related to Immigration Detention
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NORTH MACEDONIA ISSUES RELATED TO IMMIGRATION DETENTION Joint Submission to the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) in Preparation for its Visit to North Macedonia Submitted in October 2019 ABOUT THE GLOBAL DETENTION PROJECT The Global Detention Project (GDP) is a non-profit organisation based in Geneva that promotes the human rights of people who have been detained for reasons related to their non-citizen status. Our mission is: • To promote the human rights of detained migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers; • To ensure transparency in the treatment of immigration detainees; • To reinforce advocacy aimed at reforming detention systems; • To nurture policy-relevant scholarship on the causes and consequences of migration control policies. ABOUT THE MACEDONIAN YOUNG LAWYERS ASSOCIATION The Macedonian Young Lawyers Association (MYLA) is an independent, non-profit, professional organisation that provides legal aid and strategically litigates to protect human rights. Immigration detention is one of the focuses of its work through detention monitoring, providing information to detained migrants and asylum seekers, and undertaking advocacy activities aimed at ending arbitrary detention and child detention. Global Detention Project Macedonian Young Lawyers Association 3 rue de Varembé Str. "Donbas" no. 14/1-6 1202 Geneva 1000 Skopje Switzerland Republic of North Macedonia Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.globaldetentionproject.org Website: http://myla.org.mk/mk © Global Detention Project and Macedonian Young Lawyers Association, 2019 2 Submission to the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) in Preparation for its Visit to North Macedonia Immigration detention The Global Detention Project (GDP) is an independent research centre based in Geneva, Switzerland, that investigates the use of detention as a response to international immigration. Its objectives are to improve transparency in the treatment of detainees, to encourage adherence to fundamental norms, to reinforce advocacy aimed at reforming detention practices, and to promote scholarship of immigration control regimes. The Macedonian Young Lawyers Association (MYLA) is an independent, non-profit, professional organisation that provides legal aid and strategically litigates to protect human rights. Immigration detention is one of the focuses of its work through detention monitoring, providing information to detained migrants and asylum seekers, and undertaking advocacy activities aimed at ending arbitrary detention and child detention. The GDP and MYLA are pleased to provide the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) the following submission in preparation for its visit to North Macedonia in 2019. The submission concerns detention of migrants and refugees. As such, it is informed by the CPT’s relevant standards as included in “Foreign Nationals Detained Under Aliens Legislation” (7th General Report of the CPT, CPT/Inf (97)10, 1997) and “Safeguards for Irregular Migrants Deprived of their Liberty” (19th General Report of the CPT, CPT/Inf (2009)27, 2009). During the CPT’s previous visit to North Macedonia in October 2014, the delegation visited the immigration detention centre in Skopje (formally called the Reception Centre for Foreigners) and found several shortcomings, notably in relation to prevention of ill-treatment at the hands of staff and inter-detainee violence, overcrowding, and conditions of detention (poor state of repair and hygiene, lack of separate accommodation for families and separation of children, insufficient outdoor exercise, inadequate food provision, lack of recreation activities). Further, unaccompanied children were not offered specialised care, there were no medical staff in the centre on a daily basis, and contact with the outside world (both through telephone and visits) was often impeded.1 In the GDP and MYLA’s view, given the multitude and gravity of concerns about the Skopje detention centre, it is critical that the centre be visited again to assess whether the committee’s recommendations have been implemented. 1 European Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT), “Report to the Government of “the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia” on the Visit to “the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia” Carried Out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 7 to 17 October 2014, CPT/Inf (2016)8,” March 2016, https://rm.coe.int/16806974f0 © Global Detention Project and Macedonian Young Lawyers Association, 2019 3 These concerns have become even more paramount since the CPT’s 2014 visit because of the onset of the migration and “refugee crisis” in 2015. That year, roughly one million people transited the country. Official statistics provided by the Ministry of Interior indicate that 1,346 people were detained at the country’s sole official detention centre in 2015.2 After the creation of a “humanitarian corridor” in August 2015, the numbers of detainees at the Skopje facility began to drop.3 However, closure of the corridor in early 2016, which left some 1,200 migrants and asylum seekers stranded in North Macedonia, coincided with increased push-backs at its southern border.4 In mid- 2018, the government extended a state of emergency, introduced in 2015, which provides for military police patrols along the border.5 While the numbers of detainees in Skopje appears to have levelled off,6 credible reports indicate that border guards hold refugees at ad hoc “transit” camps, from which people are reportedly pushed “back” to Greece.7 This submission is based on the GDP’s report on North Macedonia8, MYLA’s annual reports on immigration detention,9 and other reports.10 Key findings and concerns that have emerged from of this research include: 2 Macedonian Young Lawyers Association (MYLA), “Irregular Migration in Macedonia in Numbers: Official Statistics Provided to the Macedonian Young Lawyers Association by the Ministry of Interior,” June 2017, http://myla.org.mk/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/IRREGULAR-MIGRATION-IN- MACEDONIA-IN-NUMBERS-2-2.png 3 Macedonian Young Lawyers Association (MYLA), “Irregular Migration in Macedonia in Numbers: Official Statistics Provided to the Macedonian Young Lawyers Association by the Ministry of Interior,” June 2017, http://myla.org.mk/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/IRREGULAR-MIGRATION-IN- MACEDONIA-IN-NUMBERS-2-2.png 4 European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights, “Case Report, Push-Backs at the Greek- Macedonian Border Violating Human Rights,” September 2016; Macedonian Young Lawyers Association (MYLA), “Annual Report on Immigration Detention in Macedonia,” 2016, http://myla.org.mk/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/MYLA-2016-Report-on-Immigration-Detention-in- Macedonia.pdf - “However, not all of the persons from the groups were detained in the Reception Centre for Foreigners. Specifically, out of 39 groups, 553 persons were returned to Greece, and only 100 (15,31%) were detained.” 5 B. Weber, "The EU-Turkey Refugee Deal and the Not Quite Closed Balkan Route," Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, June 2017, http://library.fes.de/pdf-files/bueros/sarajevo/13436.pdf 6 P. Kingsley, “Tens of Thousands Migrate Through Balkans Since Route Declared Shut,” The Guardian, 30 August, 2016, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/aug/30/tens-of-thousands- migrate-through-balkans-since-route-declared-shut 7 David Scheuing, Interview with Human Rights Adviser at the UN Country Team, 27/9/2016. 8 Global Detention Project, "Immigration Detention in Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia," June 2017, https://www.globaldetentionproject.org/countries/europe/macedonia 9 Macedonian Young Lawyers Association (MYLA), "Report on Immigration Detention in North Macedonia: 2019," http://myla.org.mk/wp- content/uploads/2019/06/WEB_ENG_AZIL_PRITVOR_IZVESHTAJ_A4_MAY-2019.pdf; Macedonian Young Lawyers Association (MYLA), « Report on Immigration Detention in North Macedonia: 2018," http://myla.org.mk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/ENG_MYLA-Annual-Immigration- Detention-Report-2017.pdf; Macedonian Young Lawyers Association (MYLA), “Quarterly Field Report on the Status of Migrant and Refugee Human Rights Jan-Mar 2019,” 2019, http://myla.org.mk/wp- content/uploads/2019/08/ENG-Quarterly-Field-Report-on-the-Status-of-Migrant-and-Refugee-Human- Rights-Jan-Mar-2019.pdf; Macedonian Young Lawyers Association (MYLA), “Human Rights Violations against Refugees and Migrants along the Western Balkan Route,” http://myla.org.mk/wp- content/uploads/2018/08/MYLA-2017-Human-Rights-Violations-against-Refugees-and-Migrants.pdf 10 Helsinki Committee for Human Rights of the Republic of Macedonia, “Monthly Report on the Human Rights of migrants, Refugees and Asylum Seekers in Serbia and Macedonia- September 2018,” © Global Detention Project and Macedonian Young Lawyers Association, 2019 4 • TRANSPARENCY AND DETENTION DATA: There is little available or comprehensive data on the numbers of immigration detainees in North Macedonia. Available information suggests that the number of detainees at the Skopje facility doubled between 2017 and 2018. However, important gaps remain. QUESTIONS Can the government provide comprehensive statistics on the total numbers of people detained for immigration- or asylum-related reasons during the years 2016, 2017, 2018, and thus far in 2019? Do official detention